URI: 
       # taz.de -- taz-Recherche auf Englisch: The Firebugs
       
       > A German right wing journalist is suspected to have paid for an arson
       > attack in Ukraine. Did he do that for Vladimir Putin?
       
   IMG Bild: After the arson attack: the Hungarian Cultural Institute in Uzhhorod (Ukraine)
       
       This text was published in German language on February 18th, 2019. The
       translation was done by Michael Dorrity. The original text can be found
       [1][here]. 
       
       Der Original-Text auf Deutsch findet sich [2][hier]. 
       
       BERLIN / KRAKOW / UZHHOROD taz | The videoclip is short, barely a minute in
       length, video surveillance captured images of a man at 4:24 AM on the 4th
       of February 2018 in Uzhhorod, in the far west of Ukraine.
       
       The office of the „Transcarpathian Society for Hungarian Culture“ is housed
       in a salmon-coloured building and two men are standing in front, with one
       launching an incendiary device. Flames flare up and though nobody is hurt,
       the attack is politically highly explosive.
       
       Reports from the Ukrainian domestic secret service SBU find that two polish
       neonazis Andrian M. and Tomasz S. checked into in a hotel in Uzhhorod under
       their own names on the day of the attack. Other video footage shows both
       men with their faces uncovered, mobile phone data also confirms their
       location and there are burn marks on their clothes. „Ukrainian authorities
       have passed their files on to Polish colleagues“ said Hosip Borto,
       vice-president of the district council of Transcarpathia and the Hungarian
       Centre for Culture.
       
       Both parties admit to the crime, and they name Michal P. as their
       contractor. P. is a Polish citizen, 30 years old, and a militiaman whose CV
       boasts a variety of neonazi activity. The organised crime division of the
       public prosecutor's office in Warsaw is bringing charges against P. for a
       number of criminal activities, including financing and preparing terrorist
       crimes abroad. M. and S. are currently facing a number of charges,
       including first degree arson.
       
       On the 14th of January , proceedings against all three began in room L-235
       of the criminal division of the district court in Krakow-Podgórze, P.'s
       place of residence. P admits to the attack but claims to have been incited
       by a German publicist. His name; Manuel Ochsenreiter, who he claims paid
       him 1500 euro.
       
       Why Transcarpathia is of interest to the Right 
       
       When the story reached Germany, it ignited serious interest in the AfD
       party. After all, Manuel Ochsenreiter is not only an important publicist in
       the far-right media landscape, but also has close connections within the
       party. Ochsenreiter has worked as a consultant for Bundestag member Markus
       Frohnmaier since September 2018. All three; P., Ochsenreiter and
       Frohnmaier, have long been active in radical right networks with a
       pro-Russian orientation.
       
       Transcarpathia is of extreme interest to these networks: Of the 1.25
       million residents, 150,000 are ethnically Hungarian. The government in
       Budapest accuses Ukraine of discriminating against these Hungarians,
       limiting education in the Hungarian language by way of a school law from
       2017 for instance. For its part, Kiev does not look kindly on Budapest
       offering Hungarian passports to Ukrainians with Hungarian roots. Indeed,
       there is a fear that Hungary could eventually claim parts of the region as
       its own.
       
       Transcarpathia is ideal ground from which to further destabilise Ukraine.
       Were Ukrainian Neo-Nazis suspected of an attack on the Hungarian minority,
       Ukraine would have a new conflict on its western front; a thoroughly
       attractive scenario for Russia.
       
       Airport Berlin Tegel: the suspected handover 
       
       The [3][ARD-Magazine Kontraste] and the online portal T-Online have both
       seen the Polish legal documents pertaining to the attack in Uzhhorod and
       issued their first report on the case, according to which the state
       prosecutors office in Krakow holds Ochsenreiter responsable for financing
       the attack. A conclusion supported not only by P.'s statement, but also by
       Whats App-Chats contained in the legal documents.
       
       According to these, Michal P. met with Ochsenreiter at Berlin-Tegel airport
       on the 7th of February 2018, receiving 1,000 euros in cash, having already
       been advanced 500 to Poland. A chat between P. and his wife appears to
       confirm this; „And what time are you meeting Manuel?“ she asks. „At 11:30,
       the return flight is at 19:30, with a change in Warsaw. I'll take a taxi
       though, I don't want to take the train with so much cash on me“ is the
       response.
       
       Ochsenreiter has refuted these accusations via the website of the far-right
       magazine Zuerst! of which he is chief-editor. Queries made by the Taz via
       email have gone unanswered and an attempt to reach him by telephone at
       Zuerst! got no further than the publisher's headquarters, where we were
       summarily dismissed; „you'll get no help from me“ we were told.
       
       In summer 2016, a year and a half before the attack in Uzhhorod, the Taz
       had met with a key-player in the case, Michal P., regarding a [4][Report]
       on paramilitary groups in Poland.
       
       Michal P., key-figure in the attack 
       
       P. mentioned Ochsenreiter of his own accord at the time. According to him,
       the most important thing for Ochsenreiter was the management of
       Owarzyszenie Jednostka Strzelecka 2039, or SJS 2039, which can roughly be
       translated as ‚gun club‘. SJS 2039 is a paramilitary unit, founded by P.
       himself. One of the two men accused of the arson attack in Uzghorod, Adrian
       M, has himself previously posted photos of SJS on facebook. Self-proclaimed
       homeland security squads such as SJS 2039 are numerous in Poland. Though
       privately organised, the Polish military is attempting to integrate them,
       and people such as P can carry out shooting exercises for adolescents with
       full permission from the state.
       
       At the time, the SJS 2039 office was a small room in a decrepit villa in
       Krakow, with ammunition boxes serving as door stops. P was 28 years old at
       the meeting in summer 2016, in uniform and with his blond hair sharply
       parted, posing with his rifle, quite unabashed.
       
       In conversation with the Taz, P. claimed that the Americans were occupying
       Germany with military bases up to this day, that Adolf Hitler was a social
       politician, that globalisation is destroying national states, that
       multiculturalism is barbaric and that people's distinctive physical
       appearances should be maintained. He described himself as a nordic,
       claiming; „when I die, it'll be in battle.“
       
       Against the West – for Russia 
       
       At the time, P. was a member of an far-right group, calling itself itself
       „Falanga.“ In 2015, photos of Falanga-men wearing masks, camouflage, and
       carrying rifles and batons were published on Falanga's message-page. The
       men can be seen standing on the Ukrainian boarder, allegedly having hunted
       for refugees. This photo, showing masked men carrying firearms, was posted
       by the group itself.
       
       P. can do nothing with the West, with Russia on the other hand a lot more;
       a fairly uncommon position for the polish far-right. In summer 2016, P.
       talked quite frankly to the Taz about the Falanga group's activities on the
       Russian side of the Donbass region, as well as their fighting for Bashar
       Al-Assad in Syria. Though he himself was not on the ground, he organised
       passage for others and took care of the „Press work.“ He also claims to
       have written the manifesto for the pro-Russian, far-right party Zmiana.
       Indeed, comments and images on Facebook are proof enough that he was active
       in the party. Michal P. has a far-right mind-set, closely connected to
       Putin's Russia: exactly Manuel Ochsenreiter's line.
       
       Signs of Manuel Ochsenreiter 
       
       The first mention of Ochsenreiter's name in connection with the attack,
       before it was taken up by the court in Krakow, was made by Anton
       Shekhovtsov. The political scientist, who recently carried out research in
       Vienna, is one the most astute observers of cooperation between Putin's
       Russia and the far-right in Western Europe, his book „Tango Noir“ has
       become a reference work on the subject. At the beginning of 2019, shortly
       before the trial in Krakow, the polish courts spoke of a „German publicist
       with close connections to Poland's far-right“ though they did not mention a
       name. On the 6th January Shekhovtsov tweeted that it may have been a ‚false
       flag‘ operation, with Ochsenreiter potentially involved.
       
       At the beginning of February Shekhovtsov, a gaunt man with a small beard,
       sat drinking a beer in a hotel lobby in Berlin: „It was obvious to me
       straight away, this could only be Ochsenreiter“ says Shekhovtsov and
       explains what led him to this conclusion.
       
       Ochsenreiter is quite a colourful character, an online search will show him
       in quite a variety of settings; posing in sunglasses with Syrian fighters;
       shaking hands with the former president of Iran Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and at
       the new right institute for State Policy in Schnellroda and the Donbass.
       Ochsenreiter, 42 years old and married to a Syrian woman, grew up in
       Allgäu. As a young man he was involved with the Junge Union, the German
       conservative parties youth organization and later in the nationalistic
       Witikobund. Indeed, during his studies he was part of a duelling
       fraternity.
       
       He ran the department of national affairs at the Junge Freiheit newspaper,
       working subsequently as chief-editor for the far-right Deutsche
       Militärzeitschrift, and has run the far-right monthly magazine Zuerst!
       since 2011. He reported from Serbia, East Ukraine and the Middle East,
       lauded in his circles as a sort of Peter Scholl-Latour of the New Right. He
       has given lecture-tours and makes appearances on Russia Today and the
       Iranian news agency Fars where he has defended Syrian dictator Bashar
       Al-Assad among others. In 2014, occupying the same stage as Holocaust
       deniers, he spoke at the „New Horizon“ conference in Tehran on the ‚Israeli
       lobby in Germany‘.
       
       Connections with the fascist ideologue Dugin 
       
       Political scientist Anton Shekhovtsov has been following Ochsenreiter for
       some time. According to Shekhovtsov, Ochsenreiter is playing a crucial role
       in taking Western Europe's far right toward Moscow. He claims the German
       National met Alexander Dugin at the end of 2012. Dugin, a fascist ideologue
       praised as a visionary of neo-euroasian thought, has been referred to by
       Ochsenreiter as a ‚fatherly friend.‘ „After that“ says Shekhovtsov
       „Ochsenreiter's pro-kremlin activities began in earnest.“ Ochsenreiter also
       appeared regularly as a commentator in Russian state media at the time.
       
       The proximity of Ochsenreiter's gang with other right-wing, Russia-friendly
       groups can be seen in a photo taken in Warsaw in 2015. Four men sit on a
       podium in front of a black flack on which two rifles are crossed over a
       white circle. One of the men is Ochsenreiter, on his right is Michal P.,
       currently facing charges for the arson attack. The head of Falanga, P.'s
       nazi-group, is also there. The fourth man is Mateusz Piskorski.
       
       Piskorski, founder of the Zmiana party, for which P. was also active, is
       another key figure in the network of pro-Russian associations who
       collaborate with the far-right in Europe. His organisation „The European
       Centre for Geopolitical analysis“ is crucial, and was similarly invited to
       the podium discussion in Warsaw. The main task of the centre is to organise
       election observation missions for western politicians in Eastern Europe,
       particularlyin separatist areas loyal to the Kremlin, or in areas annexed
       in breach of international law such as Crimea. Enjoying support from
       members of parliament from the AfD, the Austrian FPÖ or the Italian Lega
       Nord, the Kremlin's horizons are thus expanded. „In March 2014, Piskorski
       invited Ochsenreiter to observe the so-called referendum in Crimea“, says
       Shekhotsov „that was his entry into Crimea.“
       
       An association, which no longer exists? 
       
       In April 2016 Piskorski and Ochsenreiter founded an organisation; the
       „German Centre for Euroasian Studies,“ with Ochsenreiter's subsequent
       employer Markus Frohnmaier present at the launch. This is where the AfD
       reentered the game. Recently questioned about the association, Frohnmaier
       claimed it no longer exists, despite it still being listed in the
       Associations Register. Ochsenreiter is chairman, and Piskorski deputy
       chairman. The latter was arrested on charges of spying for Russia shortly
       after the launch of the association and has been in custody since. He was
       taken to court for the first time in April 2018.
       
       The term ‚Eurasia‘ was coined by the Kremlin, a cipher for efforts to push
       back US influence in Europe. The goal is a „Europe from Lisbon to
       Vladivostok.“ For members of the far-right such as Pickorski, Ochsenreiter
       or P., forging closer ties to authoritarian Russia is the most effective
       way to liberate Europe from everything they despise; liberalism,
       homosexuality, Islam, Blacks, Jews, ‚globalisation‘ and ‚elites‘. Their
       mentor is Alexander Dugin, the Russian theorist who allegedly whispers in
       Putin's ear and to whom Piskorski and Ochsenreiter are equally close.
       Dugin's books are published in Germany by Dietmar Munier, also responsible
       for publishing the monthly far-right magazine Zuerst! of which Ochsenreiter
       is chief-editor.
       
       As a pro-Russian orientation begins to permeate the AfD, the party becomes
       more and more appealing to Ochsenreiter, who continues to make contacts
       within it. During a regional congress on Russia in Saxony-Anhalt,
       Ochsenreiter was on stage next to State-Chair André Poggenburg. He was also
       present as the party's fraction in the regional parliament signed a treaty
       calling for the repeal of sanctions on Russia. He additionally accompanied
       AfD politicians on visits to Russia, Donetsk and Crimea.
       
       Ochsenreiter's former employer: An AfD lawmaker 
       
       Ochsenreiters contact with Markus Frohnmaier, a 28 year old AfD politican
       who currently has a seat in the Bundestag, is particularly intimite.
       Frohnmaier was president of the AfD youth organisation Junge Alternative,
       after which he served as spokesman for the former AfD president Frauke
       Petry, moving on to work for Alice Wiedel, currently president of the
       parliamentary faction. In June 2016, Ochsenreiter praised Frohnmaier in a
       lengthy Zuerst! article as „the most popular young politician in the
       party.“ The article also examined visits to Belgrade, Saint Petersburg and
       Donetsk, on which Frohnmaier was accompanied by editors of Zuerst!.
       
       Frohnmaier was similarly delighted with Ochsenreiter, whose far-right views
       present no problem to him. „What's relevant is the work done here in the
       Bundestag“ which in an interview with the taz in November 2018 Frohnmaier
       characterised as very good. Zuerst! was a trusted medium for high ranking
       party members and in a further interview with the taz in January,
       Frohnmaier claimed to value Ochsenreiter, his experiences and his good work
       a great deal.
       
       At this point Shekhovtsov had long since published his tweet on
       Ochsenreiter's possible involvement in the arson attack in Uzhhorod. As
       accusations emerged, Frohnmaier stood by his colleague, proclaiming that
       one is still innocent till proven guilty. He only held this line for a
       couple of days however. By mid-January they had apparently agreed, on
       Ochsenreiter's initiative, to a mutual separation and by mid-February an
       end to their working relationship. Frohnmaier no longer wishes to be quoted
       with regard to Ochsenreiter.
       
       Reports from Berlin's public prosecutor. 
       
       In the meantime, the Public Prosecutor's office in Berlin has also issued a
       report. In response to enquiries made by the taz, they confirmed there is
       initial suspicion of arson. The investigation however will take time and a
       letter of request has been sent to Poland. In the meantime, no evidence of
       further involvement of German nationals exists.
       
       Zuerst! publisher Munier issued a statement at the beginning of February
       calling for Ochsenreiter's exoneration. The accusations were nothing more
       than an ‚attempted character-assassination,‘ a ‚Polish-Ukrainian campaign
       of disinformation.‘ „I am quite sure“ said Munier „that the American secret
       service is also involved.“
       
       It is also possible that Ochsenreiter used Munier's paper to give the
       attack the appropriate political spin. On the day of the attack, a headline
       in Zuerst! ran „Budapest calls for an OSCE mission in West Ukraine“. The
       article connects the attack with the law strongly limiting the use of
       Hungarian in classrooms, which had just been ratified at the time. The take
       is quite clear, Ukraine is the aggressor; precisely the same image which
       Russia promotes.
       
       Writing from Casablanca, Ochsenreiter published a statement on Facebook on
       the 11th February 2019, decrying Ukraine as a „failed state with a decaying
       economy and a dysfunctional, corrupt government“ and speaking of an „absurd
       suspicion, the result of an obvious secret service campaign.“
       
       He then posted messages of solidarity received from pro-Russian politicians
       in Moldova and Italy, from Jürgen Elsässer, chief editor for Compact, as
       well as from the fascist, Russian theorist Alexander Dugin; his ‚fatherly
       friend‘. Dugin, for his part, declared the ‚campaign‘ against Ochsenreiter
       evidence that we are „living in the middle of a total information war,“ the
       other side are seeking „the complete economic and social extermination of
       individuals who dare to successfully fight the western liberal mainstream“.
       
       Contributors: Bernhard Clasen, Gabriele Lesser
       
       15 Mar 2019
       
       ## LINKS
       
   DIR [1] /Rechtsextreme-pro-russische-Netzwerke/!5571037
   DIR [2] /Rechtsextreme-pro-russische-Netzwerke/!5571037
   DIR [3] https://www.tagesschau.de/inland/afd-ochsenreiter-anschlag-101.html
   DIR [4] /Paramilitaerische-Gruppen-in-Polen/!5412371
       
       ## AUTOREN
       
   DIR Sabine am Orde
   DIR Christian Jakob
   DIR Christina Schmidt
       
       ## TAGS
       
   DIR taz in English
   DIR Schwerpunkt AfD
   DIR Schwerpunkt Europe's Far Right
   DIR Right Wing Extremism
   DIR Intelligence
   DIR Schwerpunkt Europe's Far Right
   DIR taz in English
   DIR taz international
       
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